The maintenance log is where every repair, inspection, and cycle of planned maintenance gets recorded. It is the document that makes a tribunal claim defensible, a sale smooth, and an insurer prompt to pay. Low effort to keep. Extraordinary value when needed.
The discipline is entries at the time, not retrospective reconstruction. Every invoice that hits the bank account should trigger a log entry the same day.
To record reactive repairs and any scheduled maintenance completed in the month.
Directors review the log together. Any unresolved items get a new action deadline.
The log stays with the company records. A sale in 10 years will ask for it.
What every log entry needs. Date of the work. Nature of the work (reactive repair, planned maintenance, statutory inspection, emergency). Contractor name and accreditation. Cost (excluding VAT for clarity). Invoice number. Date completed. Any related compliance reference (FRA action, EICR code, H&S action). Any photo evidence for significant works. Sign-off by a director.
Pick the one that matches you.
Service charges are being spent but no separate record of what each spend was for is kept. Bank statements show amounts and dates but no context.
A log exists but entries are sparse, missing fields, or months behind.
A tribunal, insurer, or buyer's solicitor has asked about a specific event in the past. The log is unclear.
Paste into a spreadsheet or a shared document. Add a new row for each event. Keep it current.
Four scenarios where a well-kept log saves significant money or exposure.
Leaseholder challenges a service charge as unreasonable. The log evidences that the work was necessary, carried out by an accredited contractor, at a reasonable cost. Tribunal cases are won and lost on this kind of evidence.
Insurer challenges a buildings claim on the basis that a contributing issue was known but not addressed. The log shows the issue was identified, the remedial action taken, and the dates. Claim proceeds without reduction.
Buyer's solicitor asks for evidence of maintenance for the last 6 years (standard enquiry). Without a log, reconstructing this from invoices and emails takes days and looks disorganised. With a log, it is one export.
HSE, fire service, or Building Safety Regulator visits after an incident. The log demonstrates active management: every inspection completed, every finding actioned, every repair documented. Prosecutions rarely follow a well-kept log. Gaps in the log are what prosecutors rely on.
Cost is nil. Discipline is everything.
The log itself costs nothing. Any software costs (spreadsheet access, property management system subscription) are small and are service charge expenses. Time is director or agent time.
The managing agent maintains the log as part of the service. Directors review at each board meeting. The agreement should explicitly require the agent to keep and share the log on request.
A nominated director maintains the log. Rotation at AGM is fine as long as handover is thorough. The log lives with the company records, not in an individual director's email.
Leaseholders can request summaries and inspect supporting documents under Section 21 and 22 LTA 1985. The log, while not technically an "account", is the underlying evidence for cost lines in the service charge.
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Read the Hafer Road case study →BLOCK-iQ reads contractor invoices against building data, adds entries to the log with all required fields, and cross-references each entry to the relevant compliance regime. Directors approve at quarterly review. The log becomes audit-ready without any catch-up.